2022 European Weightlifting Championships Full Results & Highlights

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The competition season of weightlifting is in full swing. From May 28 to June 5, 2022, Tirana, Albania, played host to the International Weightlifting Federation’s (IWF) European Weightlifting Championships (EWC).
For nine days, the 100th inaugural EWC provided an opportunity for the best competitive weightlifters in the European region to test their mettle and set new World Records.
Below are the full podium results from the Men’s and Women’s categories, as well as some of the standout moments and athletes that helped give color to the competition 2022 EWC:




[Related: Olympic Champion Akbar Djuraev (109KG) Snatches 205 Kilograms in Training]

2022 European Weightlifting Championships | Women’s Results
Below are the Women’s results from the 2022 EWC. The formatting refers to the athlete’s best snatch, clean & jerk, and Total, in order. For full session results beyond the three podium positions, refer to the EWF’s official Result Books.
Women 45 Kilograms

Saziye Erdogan (TUR) — 73/90/163
Cansu Bektas (TUR) — 68/85/153
Radmila Zagorac (SRB) — 68/84/152

Women 49 Kilograms

Giulia Imperio (ITA) — 79/92/171
Anhelina Lomachynska (UKR) — 80/87/167
Maria Jose Giménez-Guervós Perez (ESP) — 72/91/163

Women 55 Kilograms

Evagjelia Veli (ALB) — 95/113/208
Kamila Konotop (UKR) — 94/113/207
Nina Sterckx (BEL) — 94/111/205

Women 59 Kilograms

Dora Tchakounté (FRA) — 96/117/213
Lucrezia Magistris (ITA) — 98/114/212
Ine Drablos Andersson (NOR) — 90/118/208

Women 64 Kilograms

Mariia Hanhur (UKR) — 102/120/222
Nuray Güngör (TUR) — 99/120/219
Vicky Graillot (FRA) — 89/119/208

Women 71 Kilograms

Patricia Strenius (SWE) — 94/130/224
Lisa Marie Schweizer (GER) — 103/120/223
Monika Marach (POL) — 99/116/215

Women 76 Kilograms

Marie Josephe Fegue (FRA) — 110/135/245
Daniela Ivanova (LAT) — 96/126/222
Dilara Uçan (TUR) — 99/121/220

Women 81 Kilograms

Iryna Dekha (UKR) — 116/137/253
Alina Marushchak (UKR) — 108/127/235
Dilara Narin (TUR) — 99/133/232

Women 87 Kilograms

Solfrid Koanda (NOR) — 109/143/252
Anastasiia Manievska (UKR) — 107/130/237
Anastasiia Hotfrid (GEO) — 106/129/235

Women +87 Kilograms

Emily Campbell (GBR) — 118/153/271
Melike Günal (TUR) — 108/134/242
Sara Fischer (AUT) — 102/128/230


2022 European Weightlifting Championships | Men’s Results
Below are the Men’s results from the 2022 European Weightlifting Championships. Note that the formatting below refers to the athlete’s best snatch, clean & jerk, and Total, in order.
Refer to the European Weightlifting Federation’s official Result Books for full session results beyond the three podium positions.
Men 55 Kilograms

Angel Rusev (BUL) — 113/144/257
Josué Brachi (ESP) — 115/141/256
Dmytro Voronovskyi (UKR) — 108/134/242

Men 61 Kilograms

Ivan Dimov (BUL) — 135/151/286
Simon Brandhuber (GER) — 134/152/286
Gabriel Marinov (BUL) — 122/157/279

Men 67 Kilograms

Valentin Genchev (BUL) — 139/175/314
Shota Mishvelidze (GEO) — 142/165/307
Acorán Hernández (ESP) — 138/161/299

Men 73 Kilograms

Muhammed Furkan Özbek (TUR) — 149/190/339
Kakhi Asanidze (GEO) — 150/176/326
Piotr Kudlaszyk (POL) — 143/181/324

Men 81 Kilograms

Rafik Harutyunyan (ARM) — 160/194/354
Andrés Mata (ESP) — 160/186/346
Bozhidar Andreev (BUL) — 153/190/343

Men 89 Kilograms

Antonino Pizzolato (ITA) — 175/217/392
Karlos Nasar (BUL) — 171/211/382
Revaz Davitadze (GEO) — 171/198/369

Men 96 Kilograms

Davit Hovhannisyan (ARM) — 171/206/377
Ara Aghanyan (ARM) — 170/205/375
Romain Imadouchène (FRA) — 160/210/370

Men 102 Kilograms

David Fischerov (BUL) — 177/215/392
Samvel Gasparyan (ARM) — 176/214/390
Marcos Ruiz (ESP) — 176/208/384

Men 109 Kilograms

Hristo Hristov (BUL) — 180/211/391
Giorgi Chkheidze (GEO) — 174/210/384
Arsen Martirosyan (ARM) — 170/201/371

Men +109 Kilograms

Lasha Talakhadze (GEO) — 217/245/462
Varazdat Lalayan (ARM) — 211/240/451
Gor Minasyan (ARM) — 210/236/446


2022 European Weightlifting Championships | Athlete Highlights
As expected, the depth (and breadth) of talent in Tirana helped make the 2022 EWC a fantastic weightlifting event, and listing every significant moment in Albania would be a tall order. Here are a few of the athletes that stood out from the crowd and made their mark on the record books.
Team Bulgaria
There is perhaps no country with a more infamous reputation in the annals of weightlifting than Bulgaria. The Bulgarian system is renowned for its brutish and forceful methods of gaining inhuman amounts of strength and pushing its athletes to the limit.
Although the country took something of a hiatus from international competitions in the 2010s, Bulgaria made a particularly strong showing at the 2022 EWC.



[Related: Five of the Greatest Weightlifting Battles of All Time]
Notably, the men’s Bulgarian roster claimed at least one medal in all but three bodyweight categories they appeared in. The outliers were the 73, 96, and 109-kilogram classes. As a nation, Bulgaria bagged 23 medals, the highest number of any country in attendance.
That’s four more than the 19 they won at the 2021 EWC, indicating that Bulgaria is making significant strides toward dominating the European region.
Emily Campbell
History-maker Emily Campbell took home her second overall win at the EWC in Tirana. The British weightlifter handily turned the Women’s 87-kilogram session into a battle for silver by winning the session outright with a 271-kilogram Total, a full 29 kilos ahead of runner-up Melike Günal of Turkey.



[Related: The Best Weightlifting Moments of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics]
Campbell, who has only been competing internationally since 2018, rapidly ascended to the top of Great Britain’s weightlifting roster. Mere months after the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, she won bronze at the 2021 World Weightlifting Championships (WWC).
Campbell’s performance at the 2022 EWC is a bit shy of her best competitive effort — 283-kilogram Total from the Tokyo Games — but it proves that, even on an average day, Campbell is still a force to be reckoned with in Europe.
Antonino Pizzolato
Team Italy likely had the breakout performance. Before the commencement of the 2022 EWC, Bulgarian sensation Karlos Nasar posted a 390-kilogram Entry Total. Italian weightlifter Antonino “Nino” Pizzolato declared a pre-competition Total of 371 kilograms.
Both athletes were making their first official appearances in the 89-kilogram division, which is officially on the Olympic docket for Paris 2024.
The story on the competition stage played out somewhat differently, however. Pizzolato — whose previous best Total in competition was 370 kilograms at 81 kilos’ body weight — rocketed to the top of the podium by snatching 175 kilograms and clean & jerking a new World Record 217 kilograms, for a World Record in the Total of 392 kilograms.



[Related: The Best Strength Athletes in 2021]
Before the competition, 18-year-old Nasar was the presumed favorite to win in Tirana. His higher Entry Total, coupled with a knockout performance at the 2021 World Weightlifting Championships, had established that Nasar was likely to clinch the gold medal.
Pizzolato, who hadn’t competed internationally since the Tokyo Olympics nearly a year prior, has been making the most of his off-season and newer, bulked-up bodyweight.
Iryna Dekha
Despite the country’s ongoing turmoil and strife, Ukraine came to play at the 2022 EWC. Not only did they send the second-largest roster (19 athletes) to the competition, but they also won 21 overall medals, second only to Bulgaria.
Leading the charge on that front was 81-kilogram Iryna Dekha. Dekha won gold in both competition lifts (thanks partly to her signature power jerk technique) and the Total.
Her 253-kilogram Total was her highest performance since 2016 at the Junior World Weightlifting Championships, where she lifted a single kilo more.



[Related: What You Need to Know About How to Increase Strength]
Moreover, Dekha — who was last year’s European Champion at 76 kilograms — won by an impressive 18 kilograms overall and lifted 26 more kilos than the previous year’s 81-kilogram winner.
The Women’s 81-kilogram division is a confirmed category for the Paris Olympics, and Dekha is positioning herself as a serious contender there.
Lasha Talakhadze
No weightlifter in history has held a heavier barbell over their head than Georgian super-heavyweight athlete Lasha Talakhadze. The two-time (2016, 2020) Olympic Champion and five-time (2015, 2017-2019, 2021) World Champion won his sixth European title in Tirana with a 462-kilogram Total.
However, Talakhadze registered something other than a perfect “six-for-six,” no-miss performance in a rare glimpse of humanity. After finishing with 217 kilograms in the snatch, Talakhadze missed his second clean & jerk at 253 kilograms and opted not to take his third try.
Before this, Talakhadze had not failed a competition lift since the 2018 EWC, where he missed a 221-kilogram snatch.
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On Jun. 6, 2022, Team Georgia’s athlete physician revealed on social media (Note: the video depicts the athlete suffering a traumatic injury on camera) that Talakhadze had suffered a thigh or groin injury just two months prior in April of 2022, an ailment that visibly plagued him onstage in Albania.
Nonetheless, to compete while injured and still perform well enough to win another European title speaks to Talakhadze’s tenacity and dedication to the sport.
Patricia Strenius
71-kilogram Swedish weightlifter Patricia Strenius made the 2022 EWC into a triumphant swan song. Strenius is a competition machine — in her eight years as a professional weightlifter, she participated in a whopping 17 IWF events, often finishing in the top three to five in one of the more competitive Women’s divisions.



[Related: Weightlifter Katherine Nye Squats All-Time Personal Record 186 Kilograms]
Despite finishing sixth after the snatches, Strenius came back from behind in a big way during the clean & jerks. She jerked 130 kilograms, a full 10 kilos ahead of silver medalist Lisa Marie Schweizer of Germany.
That lift secured Strenius her second European Championship title. She announced her retirement from competitive weightlifting shortly after on social media.
What Comes Next
Midway through 2022, the sport of weightlifting has already seen many thrilling displays, as well as World Records set — and shattered. With the 2022 EWC wrapped up, athletes and fans turn their gazes forward.
According to the official IWF Calendar, the next big Senior regional competition is the 2022 Pan-American Championships, held from July 24-29 in Bogotá, Colombia.
Bogotá was also recently confirmed as the adjusted host site for the 2022 WWC. The exact dates for that competition are still to be determined by the IWF.
Featured Image: @nino_pizzolato on Instagram

The competition season of weightlifting is in full swing. From May 28 to June 5, 2022, Tirana, Albania, played host to the International Weightlifting Federation’s (IWF) European Weightlifting Championships (EWC).


For nine days, the 100th inaugural EWC provided an opportunity for the best competitive weightlifters in the European region to test their mettle and set new World Records.


Below are the full podium results from the Men’s and Women’s categories, as well as some of the standout moments and athletes that helped give color to the competition 2022 EWC:





[/quote]
[Related: Olympic Champion Akbar Djuraev (109KG) Snatches 205 Kilograms in Training]



2022 European Weightlifting Championships | Women’s Results
Below are the Women’s results from the 2022 EWC. The formatting refers to the athlete’s best snatch, clean & jerk, and Total, in order. For full session results beyond the three podium positions, refer to the EWF’s official Result Books.


Women 45 Kilograms

[*]Saziye Erdogan (TUR) — 73/90/163
[*]Cansu Bektas (TUR) — 68/85/153
[*]Radmila Zagorac (SRB) — 68/84/152

Women 49 Kilograms

[*]Giulia Imperio (ITA) — 79/92/171
[*]Anhelina Lomachynska (UKR) — 80/87/167
[*]Maria Jose Giménez-Guervós Perez (ESP) — 72/91/163

Women 55 Kilograms

[*]Evagjelia Veli (ALB) — 95/113/208
[*]Kamila Konotop (UKR) — 94/113/207
[*]Nina Sterckx (BEL) — 94/111/205

Women 59 Kilograms

[*]Dora Tchakounté (FRA) — 96/117/213
[*]Lucrezia Magistris (ITA) — 98/114/212
[*]Ine Drablos Andersson (NOR) — 90/118/208

Women 64 Kilograms

[*]Mariia Hanhur (UKR) — 102/120/222
[*]Nuray Güngör (TUR) — 99/120/219
[*]Vicky Graillot (FRA) — 89/119/208

Women 71 Kilograms

[*]Patricia Strenius (SWE) — 94/130/224
[*]Lisa Marie Schweizer (GER) — 103/120/223
[*]Monika Marach (POL) — 99/116/215

Women 76 Kilograms

[*]Marie Josephe Fegue (FRA) — 110/135/245
[*]Daniela Ivanova (LAT) — 96/126/222
[*]Dilara Uçan (TUR) — 99/121/220

Women 81 Kilograms

[*]Iryna Dekha (UKR) — 116/137/253
[*]Alina Marushchak (UKR) — 108/127/235
[*]Dilara Narin (TUR) — 99/133/232

Women 87 Kilograms

[*]Solfrid Koanda (NOR) — 109/143/252
[*]Anastasiia Manievska (UKR) — 107/130/237
[*]Anastasiia Hotfrid (GEO) — 106/129/235

Women +87 Kilograms

[*]Emily Campbell (GBR) — 118/153/271
[*]Melike Günal (TUR) — 108/134/242
[*]Sara Fischer (AUT) — 102/128/230


2022 European Weightlifting Championships | Men’s Results
Below are the Men’s results from the 2022 European Weightlifting Championships. Note that the formatting below refers to the athlete’s best snatch, clean & jerk, and Total, in order.


Refer to the European Weightlifting Federation’s official Result Books for full session results beyond the three podium positions.


Men 55 Kilograms

[*]Angel Rusev (BUL) — 113/144/257
[*]Josué Brachi (ESP) — 115/141/256
[*]Dmytro Voronovskyi (UKR) — 108/134/242

Men 61 Kilograms

[*]Ivan Dimov (BUL) — 135/151/286
[*]Simon Brandhuber (GER) — 134/152/286
[*]Gabriel Marinov (BUL) — 122/157/279

Men 67 Kilograms

[*]Valentin Genchev (BUL) — 139/175/314
[*]Shota Mishvelidze (GEO) — 142/165/307
[*]Acorán Hernández (ESP) — 138/161/299

Men 73 Kilograms

[*]Muhammed Furkan Özbek (TUR) — 149/190/339
[*]Kakhi Asanidze (GEO) — 150/176/326
[*]Piotr Kudlaszyk (POL) — 143/181/324

Men 81 Kilograms

[*]Rafik Harutyunyan (ARM) — 160/194/354
[*]Andrés Mata (ESP) — 160/186/346
[*]Bozhidar Andreev (BUL) — 153/190/343

Men 89 Kilograms

[*]Antonino Pizzolato (ITA) — 175/217/392
[*]Karlos Nasar (BUL) — 171/211/382
[*]Revaz Davitadze (GEO) — 171/198/369

Men 96 Kilograms

[*]Davit Hovhannisyan (ARM) — 171/206/377
[*]Ara Aghanyan (ARM) — 170/205/375
[*]Romain Imadouchène (FRA) — 160/210/370

Men 102 Kilograms

[*]David Fischerov (BUL) — 177/215/392
[*]Samvel Gasparyan (ARM) — 176/214/390
[*]Marcos Ruiz (ESP) — 176/208/384

Men 109 Kilograms

[*]Hristo Hristov (BUL) — 180/211/391
[*]Giorgi Chkheidze (GEO) — 174/210/384
[*]Arsen Martirosyan (ARM) — 170/201/371

Men +109 Kilograms

[*]Lasha Talakhadze (GEO) — 217/245/462
[*]Varazdat Lalayan (ARM) — 211/240/451
[*]Gor Minasyan (ARM) — 210/236/446


2022 European Weightlifting Championships | Athlete Highlights
As expected, the depth (and breadth) of talent in Tirana helped make the 2022 EWC a fantastic weightlifting event, and listing every significant moment in Albania would be a tall order. Here are a few of the athletes that stood out from the crowd and made their mark on the record books.


Team Bulgaria
There is perhaps no country with a more infamous reputation in the annals of weightlifting than Bulgaria. The Bulgarian system is renowned for its brutish and forceful methods of gaining inhuman amounts of strength and pushing its athletes to the limit.


Although the country took something of a hiatus from international competitions in the 2010s, Bulgaria made a particularly strong showing at the 2022 EWC.




[/quote]
[Related: Five of the Greatest Weightlifting Battles of All Time]


Notably, the men’s Bulgarian roster claimed at least one medal in all but three bodyweight categories they appeared in. The outliers were the 73, 96, and 109-kilogram classes. As a nation, Bulgaria bagged 23 medals, the highest number of any country in attendance.


That’s four more than the 19 they won at the 2021 EWC, indicating that Bulgaria is making significant strides toward dominating the European region.


Emily Campbell
History-maker Emily Campbell took home her second overall win at the EWC in Tirana. The British weightlifter handily turned the Women’s 87-kilogram session into a battle for silver by winning the session outright with a 271-kilogram Total, a full 29 kilos ahead of runner-up Melike Günal of Turkey.




[/quote]
[Related: The Best Weightlifting Moments of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics]


Campbell, who has only been competing internationally since 2018, rapidly ascended to the top of Great Britain’s weightlifting roster. Mere months after the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, she won bronze at the 2021 World Weightlifting Championships (WWC).


Campbell’s performance at the 2022 EWC is a bit shy of her best competitive effort — 283-kilogram Total from the Tokyo Games — but it proves that, even on an average day, Campbell is still a force to be reckoned with in Europe.


Antonino Pizzolato
Team Italy likely had the breakout performance. Before the commencement of the 2022 EWC, Bulgarian sensation Karlos Nasar posted a 390-kilogram Entry Total. Italian weightlifter Antonino “Nino” Pizzolato declared a pre-competition Total of 371 kilograms.


Both athletes were making their first official appearances in the 89-kilogram division, which is officially on the Olympic docket for Paris 2024.


The story on the competition stage played out somewhat differently, however. Pizzolato — whose previous best Total in competition was 370 kilograms at 81 kilos’ body weight — rocketed to the top of the podium by snatching 175 kilograms and clean & jerking a new World Record 217 kilograms, for a World Record in the Total of 392 kilograms.




[/quote]
[Related: The Best Strength Athletes in 2021]


Before the competition, 18-year-old Nasar was the presumed favorite to win in Tirana. His higher Entry Total, coupled with a knockout performance at the 2021 World Weightlifting Championships, had established that Nasar was likely to clinch the gold medal.


Pizzolato, who hadn’t competed internationally since the Tokyo Olympics nearly a year prior, has been making the most of his off-season and newer, bulked-up bodyweight.


Iryna Dekha
Despite the country’s ongoing turmoil and strife, Ukraine came to play at the 2022 EWC. Not only did they send the second-largest roster (19 athletes) to the competition, but they also won 21 overall medals, second only to Bulgaria.


Leading the charge on that front was 81-kilogram Iryna Dekha. Dekha won gold in both competition lifts (thanks partly to her signature power jerk technique) and the Total.


Her 253-kilogram Total was her highest performance since 2016 at the Junior World Weightlifting Championships, where she lifted a single kilo more.




[/quote]
[Related: What You Need to Know About How to Increase Strength]


Moreover, Dekha — who was last year’s European Champion at 76 kilograms — won by an impressive 18 kilograms overall and lifted 26 more kilos than the previous year’s 81-kilogram winner.


The Women’s 81-kilogram division is a confirmed category for the Paris Olympics, and Dekha is positioning herself as a serious contender there.


Lasha Talakhadze
No weightlifter in history has held a heavier barbell over their head than Georgian super-heavyweight athlete Lasha Talakhadze. The two-time (2016, 2020) Olympic Champion and five-time (2015, 2017-2019, 2021) World Champion won his sixth European title in Tirana with a 462-kilogram Total.


However, Talakhadze registered something other than a perfect “six-for-six,” no-miss performance in a rare glimpse of humanity. After finishing with 217 kilograms in the snatch, Talakhadze missed his second clean & jerk at 253 kilograms and opted not to take his third try.


Before this, Talakhadze had not failed a competition lift since the 2018 EWC, where he missed a 221-kilogram snatch.






On Jun. 6, 2022, Team Georgia’s athlete physician revealed on social media (Note: the video depicts the athlete suffering a traumatic injury on camera) that Talakhadze had suffered a thigh or groin injury just two months prior in April of 2022, an ailment that visibly plagued him onstage in Albania.


Nonetheless, to compete while injured and still perform well enough to win another European title speaks to Talakhadze’s tenacity and dedication to the sport.


Patricia Strenius
71-kilogram Swedish weightlifter Patricia Strenius made the 2022 EWC into a triumphant swan song. Strenius is a competition machine — in her eight years as a professional weightlifter, she participated in a whopping 17 IWF events, often finishing in the top three to five in one of the more competitive Women’s divisions.




[/quote]
[Related: Weightlifter Katherine Nye Squats All-Time Personal Record 186 Kilograms]


Despite finishing sixth after the snatches, Strenius came back from behind in a big way during the clean & jerks. She jerked 130 kilograms, a full 10 kilos ahead of silver medalist Lisa Marie Schweizer of Germany.


That lift secured Strenius her second European Championship title. She announced her retirement from competitive weightlifting shortly after on social media.


What Comes Next
Midway through 2022, the sport of weightlifting has already seen many thrilling displays, as well as World Records set — and shattered. With the 2022 EWC wrapped up, athletes and fans turn their gazes forward.


According to the official IWF Calendar, the next big Senior regional competition is the 2022 Pan-American Championships, held from July 24-29 in Bogotá, Colombia.


Bogotá was also recently confirmed as the adjusted host site for the 2022 WWC. The exact dates for that competition are still to be determined by the IWF.


Featured Image: @nino_pizzolato on Instagram




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